Here's a recap of each amendment that was on Floridian ballots, whether they passed or failed and what weed and abortion laws are like in Florida.
Floridians rejected the proposal to enshrine abortion into the state Constitution after they learned it would open the floodgates for taxpayer-funded abortion "at any time" and "for any reason," one pro-life advocate said.
The Florida Senate race was a highlight on the 2024 ballot, and Amendment 4 on abortion rights has drawn national attention.
Despite millions of dollars poured into ads and other voter outreach, a proposed constitutional amendment that would have protected abortion access in Florida failed Tuesday. Amendment 4, backed by a coalition of groups supporting abortion access,
Amendment 3 was not backed by at least 60% of Florida voters, meaning that recreational marijuana use will remain illegal in the state.
With 99 percent of votes tabulated, here's how Florida voters felt about six proposed amendments on the ballot.
Florida’s voters were asked whether the state’s constitution should say that “no law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.”
A strong across-the-board showing by Donald Trump helped propel the Republican former president to victory in Florida, once a preeminent swing state that has increasingly slipped out of Democrats’ grasp.
Just under 11 million Floridians voted in this election, the highest percentage of registered voters in decades.
How to vote on 2024 Florida Amendments, according to 6 Florida newspapers. It may surprise you to see which endorsements are a “yes,” which say “no.”
Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024. Do you know what Amendment 5 — the homestead exemption amendment — means and whether you'll vote "yes" or "no"?